- Righteousness
by Faith
- Lessons on Faith
- By A. T. Jones
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- Chapter 27 Christian
Perfection
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"Be ye therefore perfect." And the
song, "Saved to the uttermost," which has just been
sung, is sufficient ground for the "therefore"--"Be
ye therefore perfect." Matt. 5:48. You know that such is
the word of God. You know that we are exhorted to "go on
unto perfection." Heb. 6:1. You know that the gospel, the
very preaching of the gospel which you and I preach, is to "present
every man perfect in Christ Jesus." Col. 1:28. Then it is
not for us to say that perfection is not expected of us. It is
expected of us. You must expect it of yourself. I must expect
it of myself. And I must not accept anything in myself or of
myself that does not meet in perfection the standard of perfection
which God has set. What could possibly prevent us from attaining
perfection more than to think that it is not expected? I say
again, What could possibly prevent you and me from attaining
unto perfection more than for us to say that it is not expected
that we should be perfect?
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Then, as it is settled that the Word says
that you and I are to be perfect, the only thing for you and
me to consider is the way. That is all. Let it be settled by
you and by me that perfection, nothing short of perfection as
God has set it, is to be expected of you and me, and that you
and I will not accept anything in ourselves, in what we have
done, nor anything about us, that is a hair's breadth short of
perfection as God has set it--let this be settled by each one
and settled forever--then inquire only the way, and the thing
will be accomplished.
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- What is the standard, then? What is the
standard which God has set? "Be ye therefore perfect, even
as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." The perfection
of God is the only standard. And you and I must set ourselves
right there and stand face to face with ourselves, always demanding
of ourselves that there shall be perfection such as God's is
in us and that we will not look with a particle of allowance
upon, we will not apologize for nor excuse, anything in ourselves
that is in any conceivable degree short of that perfection.
- It is plain enough that we cannot be perfect
in greatness as God is nor in omnipotence as He is nor in omniscience
as He is. God is character, and it is perfection of character
as His is that He has set for you and me to which we shall attain,
which alone we are to expect and which alone we are to accept
in ourselves. Then when it is God's own perfection which you
and I must have and which alone we will accept of ourselves and
we hold ourselves to that standard always, you can see at once
that that will be for you and me only to hold ourselves constantly
in the presence of the judgment of God. There is where every
one of us expects to stand, whether we are righteous or wicked.
Why not stand there, then, and be done with it? It is settled
that you and I are to stand at the judgement seat of Christ and
there every one of us shall be measured by that standard. God
"hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world
in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he
hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him
from the dead." Acts 17:31.
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- The resurrection of Christ is God's pledge
to the world that every man shall stand before the judgement
seat of Christ. That is settled. You and I expect it; we preach
it; we believe it. Then why not put ourselves there and stand
steadily there? Why wait? Those who wait and continue to wait
will not be able to stand there. The ungodly cannot stand in
this judgment, but those who put themselves before the judgment
seat of God, facing the standard of judgment and hold themselves
there constantly in thought, word, and deed are ready for the
judgment any moment. Ready for it? They have it; they are there;
they are passing it; they are inviting the judgment, and all
that the judgment brings; they stand there expecting to be passed
upon, and only He who does this is safe. The very blessing that
comes in that thing is all the reward that any person needs for
putting himself just now before the judgment seat. And standing
there what has he to fear? Nothing. And when all fear is cast
out, what is it that does it? Perfect love. But perfect love
can come only by our meeting that perfect standard of the judgment,
in the judgment, and can be kept only by standing there.
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- That being settled, let us inquire the
way--the way, that is all. It is settled, then, that mine is
not the standard. Think of it! "Be ye therefore perfect,
even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." His
perfection is the only standard. Then whose measurement of the
standard, whose estimate of the standard, is the proper one?
Not mine. I cannot measure God's perfection. You remember the
verse--perhaps it occurs to you this moment: "I have seen
an end of all perfection: but thy commandment is exceeding broad."
Ps. 119:96.
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- No finite mind can measure God's perfection.
Then it is settled, so far, that we are to be perfect; our perfection
is to be as His perfection is and according to His own estimate
of His own perfection. Then that takes entirely away from you
and me the whole plan and everything about it as to the doing
of it. For when I cannot measure the standard, how should I attain
to it, even if it were given me to do? Then let it be settled
also that as to the doing of it, it is put utterly beyond you.
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- This also was said long, long ago: "I
know it is so of a truth, but how should man be just with God?
If he will contend with him, he cannot answer Him one of a thousand.
. . . If I speak of strength, lo, he is strong; and if of judgment,
who shall set me a time to plead?"
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- And when I should come to plead, what
then? "If I justify myself, mine own mouth shall condemn
me." If I can measure up myself to the satisfaction of myself
and pronounce the balance settled, when it is set alongside of
his estimate, my own estimate is so far short that it condemns
me utterly. There is in it no basis of justification. "If
I say, I am perfect, it [my own mouth] shall also prove me perverse."
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- "Though I were perfect, yet would
I not know my soul: I would despise my life." My own standard
of perfection, when set in the presence of His and seen in the
light of His, would be so far short that I myself would despise
it. "If I wash myself with snow-water and make my hands
never so clean; yet shalt thou plunge me in the ditch and mine
own clothes shall abhor me." Job 9:1, 2, 19-21, 30, 31.
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- That is as near as we could come to the
standard, if it were given to us to do. Then let us forever abandon
all idea that perfection is anything that we are to work out.
Perfection is that to which we are to attain, nothing but that.
God expects it, and He has made provision for it. That is what
we were created for. The only object of our existence is to be
just that--perfect with God's perfection. And remember that we
are to be perfect with His character. His standard of character
is to be ours. Yea, His character itself is to be ours. We are
not to have one made like it; it itself is to be ours. And that
alone is Christian perfection.
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- Now that we must have that, the whole
story is told in three texts. The first one is in the first chapter
of Ephesians, beginning with the third verse in order correctly
to get the story in the fourth verse:
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- "Blessed be the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual
blessings in heavenly places in Christ: according as he hath
chosen us in him before the foundation of the world [now notice
what He chose us for; this is the object He had before the foundation
of the world, in choosing you and me, and bringing us to this
hour. Then let us face the issue], that we should be holy and
without blame before him in love."
- That is His only thought concerning us.
That is all that he made us for; that is all we exist for. Then
another word right there: When that is so, why shall we not face
it? Why shall we not just now meet the object of our existence
and be holy and without blame before Him in love?
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- The next text is Col. 1:19-22: "It
pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell, and
having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile
all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be things
in earth, or things in heaven. And you, that were sometime alienated
and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled
in the body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and
unblameable and unreprovable in his sight."
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- First, He made us for that purpose. By
sin we were swung entirely out of that purpose, the whole purpose
was frustrated, but He endured the cross. It pleased God thus
to do and it pleased Christ thus to do it, that His original
purpose might be fulfilled. The point is, that by His cross He
reconciled us, in order that this original purpose might be met
in us--the purpose that He had before the foundation of the world,
that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love.
The blood of Christ, the reconciliation of peace which is brought
to the world by Jesus Christ, is in order that He might present
us holy--that He might do that very thing that He had in mind
before the foundation of the world--that He might present you
and me "holy and unblameable and unreprovable in his sight."
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- The way to Christian perfection is the
way of the cross, and there is no other way. I mean there is
no other way for you and me. The way to bring it to us, the only
way, was by way of the cross. He came that way and brought it
and the only way for you and me to get it is by the way of the
cross. He has made provision that He Himself shall do this; we
do not come into it at all, for the doing.
- Now notice (Eph. 4:7-13) what is really
done in this, how fully He has supplied the need.
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- "Unto every one of us is given grace
according to the measure of the gift of Christ." No think.
What did the gift of Christ do, so far in our study? It "made
peace through the blood of his cross," and reconciled all
to God. And it did it to make us what, before the foundation
of the world, He designed we should be--"holy and unblameable
and unreprovable in his sight." That is the measure of the
gift of Christ in this thing. And it accomplished the purpose
for all so far that it opened the way for all. And unto every
one of us, just now, is given grace according to the same measure.
Then what the cross brought to us and put within our reach, the
grace of God gives us and accomplishes in us.
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- Now let us read right on and you will
see that this is all so, right up to the very word perfection
itself: "Unto every one of us is given grace according to
the measure of the gift of Christ. Wherefore He saith, When he
ascended up on high, he led captivity captive and gave gifts
unto men. And he gave some apostles and some prophets and some
evangelists and some pastors and teachers." What for? "For
the perfecting of the saints." Brethren, when those gifts
are given for that purpose, what are we doing when we do not
face the fact and long for the gifts and pray for the gifts and
receive the gifts which accomplish the purpose? What are we doing
otherwise?
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- "For the perfecting of the saints
for the work of the ministry, TILL"--given for an object;
brought to us for a purpose, a defined, distinct, definite purpose
and UNTIL that purpose is accomplished. It is given "for
the perfecting of the saints" and it is given "till
we all come in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of
the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature
of the fullness of Christ."
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- Thus perfection is the only aim. God's
standard is the only one. "Be ye therefore perfect, even
as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." We cannot
measure it and could not attain to it, if it were given us to
do. It is the object of our creation, and when that object was
frustrated by sin, He made it possible to all by the blood of
His cross and makes it certain to every believer by the gifts
of the Holy Spirit.
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- Then again I ask, Why should we not constantly
face Christian perfection and accept nothing of ourselves but
that?
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- The 24th of Jude connects directly with
what has been read and said, "Now unto him that is able
to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before
the presence of his glory with exceeding joy, to the only wise
God our Saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both
now and ever.
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- He chose us before the foundation of the
world, "that we should be holy and without blame before
him in love." By the cross He made it possible to every
soul, even when by sin we had lost all chance. And by the cross
he bought the right "to present you holy and unblameable
and unreprovable in his sight." The right to do this belongs
only to Him. You and I could not do it if it were given to us
to do, but the right to do it does not belong to us. When we
had lost it, nothing but the cross of Calvary could restore it.
And no one could pay the price of Calvary but He who did pay
it. Then as certainly as only He who paid the price could pay
the price that must bring this to us, so certainly the right
belongs only to Him by right of the cross of Calvary. And no
one who has not endured the literal wooden cross of Calvary can
ever have any right to take up that task to accomplish it. Only
He endured the cross; to Him alone belongs the task. And there
stands the word: He "is able." He "is able . .
. to present you faultless before the presence of his glory."
He who is able to endure the cross is able to accomplish all
that the cross made possible. So He "is able . . . to present
you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding
joy"--When? That is the question. When?
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- [Voices: "Now."]
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- Precisely. He is the same yesterday, today
and forever. He is as able just now as He was then or as He will
ever be.
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- Yet bear in mind that it is ever true
that only by the way of the cross does it come to you and to
me just now or ever. Let us study the Word that you may see this.
Read Rom. 5:21, and then glance through the sixth chapter, for
it is occupied with this one story. The last two verses of the
fifth chapter of Romans read thus: "Moreover the law entered,
that the offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound; that as sin hath reigned unto death, even
so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life
by Jesus Christ our Lord."
- Now the comparison or rather the contrast--for
it is a comparison that amounts to a contrast--"as"
and "even so." "As sin hath reigned." You
know how sin reigned. Everyone here knows how sin has reigned.
some may know even yet how it reigns. When sin reigned, the reign
was absolute, so that it was easier to do wrong than it was to
do right. We longed to do right, but "the good that I would
I do not, but the evil which I would not, that I do." Rom.
7:19. That is the reign of sin. Then when sin reigned, it was
easier to do wrong than it was to do right.
- "Even so might grace reign through
righteousness." When grace reigns, it is easier to do right
than it is to do wrong. That is the comparison. Notice: As sin
reigned, even so grace reigns. When sin reigned, it reigned against
grace; it beat back all the power of grace that God had given,
but when the power of sin is broken and grace reigns, then grace
reigns against sin and beats back all the power of sin. So it
is as literally true that under the reign of grace it is easier
to do right than to do wrong, as it is true that under the reign
of sin it is easier to do wrong than to do right.
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- So then the way is clear, isn't it? Let
us go that way. "That as sin hath reigned unto death, even
so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life
by Jesus Christ our Lord. What shall we say then? Shall we continue
in sin that grace may abound?"
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- [Voices: "God forbid."]
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- You say, "God forbid." That
is right. Now God has put His forbid and you endorse it, against
sinning that grace may abound. Then has not God put His forbid
against sinning at all? Do you endorse that? Do you put your
endorsement upon God's forbid that you shall sin at all under
the reign of grace?
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- [Voices: "Yes."]
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- Then doesn't He intend that you and I
shall be kept from sinning? And when we know that He intends
it then we can confidently expect it. If we do not expect it,
it will never be done.
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- So then the first verse of the sixth chapter
of Romans shows that God intends that we shall be kept from sinning,
doesn't it?
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- What does the second verse say? "How
shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?"
Well, how shall we? Then what does that verse intend? That we
shall not continue at all in sin. Then being dead brings in the
burial. Buried with Him by baptism into death and raised to walk
in newness of life. "Knowing this, that our old man is crucified
with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth
we should not serve sin." There is the course laid out before
us, and it is the way of the cross.
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- Now notice three things there: Knowing
this, that our old man is crucified with Him. What for? "That
the body of sin might be destroyed." And what is that for?
"That henceforth we should not serve sin." Unless the
body of sin is destroyed, we will serve sin. Unless the old man
is crucified, the body of sin is not destroyed. Then the way
to be kept from sinning is the way of crucifixion and destruction.
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- The only question, then, for us each to
settle is, Would I rather be crucified and destroyed than to
sin? If with you it is everlastingly settled that you would rather
be crucified and rather meet destruction this moment than to
sin, you will never sin. "Crucified with him, that the body
of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve
sin." Then freedom from the service of sin lies only through
crucifixion and destruction. Do you choose sin or do you choose
crucifixion and destruction. Will you choose destruction and
escape sin? Or will you choose sin and destruction too? That
is the question. It is not an alternative. He who would evade
destruction, to escape destruction, meets destruction. He who
chooses destruction escapes destruction.
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- Well, then, the way of destruction by
the cross of Christ is the way of salvation. Jesus Christ went
to destruction on the cross to bring salvation to you and me.
It cost the destruction of the Son of God in the cross, to bring
salvation to you and me. Will we give destruction for salvation?
Will you? Anybody who fixes it and holds it in his hand as an
everlasting bid, that he gives destruction, every moment of his
life, for salvation, will never lack salvation.
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- But there is where the trouble comes.
Destruction is not pleasant; it is not easy--that is, to the
old man. To the natural choice, it is not easy to be destroyed,
but to him who does it, it is easy. It is easy when it is done
and it is easy to continue it forever when it is done.
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- When is it that we are to do this? When
is it that He presents us faultless before the presence of His
glory? Now. And the only way is the way of destruction. Now is
the time to choose destruction. Now is the time to deliver up
yourself forever to destruction. But if I hold myself back, if
I shrink from destruction, then what am I shrinking from? Salvation.
For "our old man is crucified with him, that the body of
sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin."
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- Then if I meet some experience that puts
me into a pressure that seems like destruction, that is all right;
for destruction is what I have chosen, that I may not serve sin.
Such a surrender brings Christian pleasantness into the life
for the joy, the lasting peace, and the satisfaction of being
kept from sinning is worth all the destruction that can ever
come to you and me. It is worth it. So it is not a hard bargain
that is driven; it is the grandest one that ever came to men.
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- Crucifixion, destruction, and then henceforth
not serving sin--there, then, is the way to Christian perfection.
Why? "For he that is dead is freed from sin." Rom.
6:7. Thank the Lord, he that is dead is freed from sin. Then
the only question that can ever come in my life or yours is,
Am I dead? And if I am not and something occurs that accomplishes
it, freedom from sin is the only consequence; and that is worth
all that it costs.
- See also the next verse: "Now, if
we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with
him." The first verse intends that we shall be free from
sin. The second verse intends that we shall be free from sin.
The sixth verse says that we are not henceforth to serve sin;
the seventh verse says he that is dead is freed from sin; the
eighth verse says if we be dead with Christ, we shall also live
with Him. Where does He live--in righteousness or in sin?
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- [Voices: "In righteousness."]
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- Very good. Then it is plain that the first,
the second, the sixth, the seventh, and the eighth verses of
the sixth chapter of Romans all intend that we shall be kept
from sinning.
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- How about the ninth verse? "Knowing
that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath
no more dominion over him." How was it that death ever had
dominion over him at all? Because of sin--not his own, but ours,
for He was made "to be sin for us, who knew no sin."
Then death hath no more dominion over Him. He has victory over
sin and all its consequences forever. Then what does that verse
tell you and me? We are risen with Him. "For in that He
died, He died unto sin once, but in that He liveth, He liveth
unto God." Then both the ninth and tenth verses also intend
that we shall be kept from sinning.
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- The eleventh verse: "Likewise reckon
ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto
God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign
in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof."
And thus again He intends that we shall not sin.
- "Neither yield ye your members as
instruments of unrighteousness unto sin: but yield yourselves
unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and your members
as instruments of righteousness unto God. For sin shall not have
dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace."
The reign of grace lifts the soul above sin, holds it there,
reigns against the power of sin, and delivers the soul from sinning.
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- "What then? shall we sin because
we are not under the law but under grace? God forbid." Thus
from the first verse to the fourteenth of the sixth chapter of
Romans, there is preached, over and over, deliverance from sin
and from sinning. That is great, but there is something still
in advance of that. "Let us go on unto perfection."
- Listen: "Know ye not, that to whom
ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to
whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto
righteousness?" Delivered from the power of sin, to whom
did ye yield yourselves? To God. Then you are His servants, set
free to the service of righteousness. God does not intend there
shall be a blank life in His keeping us from sinning. He intends
that there shall be active, intelligent service and that only
righteousness shall be the result. It is a wonderfully great
thing to be made free from sin and to be kept from sinning; it
is another wonderfully great thing upon that to be made the servants
of righteousness so that our service is unto righteousness.
- Therefore let every soul echo, "God
be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed
from the heart that form of doctrine which has delivered you.
Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness.
Thank the Lord for that! He says you are, and when He says you
are, it is so. Thank Him for it. Thank Him that you are delivered
from sin, and thank the Lord that you are the servant of righteousness.
He has made you so, for He says so.
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- But that is not all yet. "I speak
after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh,
for as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and
to iniquity unto iniquity, even so now yield your members servants
to righteousness unto holiness. For when ye were the servants
of sin, ye were free from righteousness." The Lord in this
appeals to your experience and mine. "When ye were the servants
of sin, ye were free from righteousness." You know that
that is so. Take now the complement of it: "What fruit had
ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? For the end
of those things is death. But now being made free from sin and
become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness and
the end everlasting life."
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- We are not the servants of sin, free from
righteousness, but we are the servants of righteousness, free
from sin. As I have dwelt upon this and the Lord has fed my soul
upon the whole of it, I am reminded every once in a while of
an expression of Milton's where he speaks of the songs of the
angels as notes of "measured sweetness long drawn out."
This sixth chapter of Romans is one of those notes of measured
sweetness long drawn out.
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- It begins with freedom from sin; that
is a great thing. Next upon that, freedom from sinning, and that
is a great thing. Next upon that, servants to righteousness,
and that is a great thing. Next upon that, unto holiness, and
that is a great thing. And upon all, the end, everlasting life,
and that is a great thing. Isn't that a note, then of the Lord's,
of measured sweetness long drawn out? Oh, receive it, dwell upon
it, catch the sweet tones, and let them linger in the soul day
and night. It does the soul good.
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- And there is the way to Christian perfection.
It is the way of crucifixion, unto destruction of the body of
sin, unto freedom from sinning, unto the service of righteousness,
unto holiness, unto perfection in Jesus Christ by the Holy Ghost,
unto everlasting life.
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- Let us look again at the statement that
the gifts are for the perfecting of the saints, "till we
all come in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the
Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature
of the fullness of Christ." There is the pattern. The way
that Christ went in this world of sin and in sinful flesh--your
flesh and mine, burdened with the sins of the world, the way
He went in perfection and to perfection, is the way set before
us.
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- He was born of the Holy Ghost. In other
words, Jesus Christ was born again. He came from heaven, God's
first-born, to the earth, and was born again. But all in Christ's
work goes by opposites for us: He, the sinless one, was made
to be sin in order that we might be made the righteousness of
God in Him. He, the living One, the Prince and Author of life,
died that we might live. He whose goings forth have been from
the days of eternity, the first-born of God, was born again in
order that we might be born again.
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- If Jesus Christ had never been born again,
could you and I have ever been born again? No. But He was born
again, from the world of righteousness into the world of sin;
that we might be born again, from the world of sin into the world
of righteousness. He was born again and was made partaker of
the human nature that we might be born again and so made partakers
of the divine nature. He was born again, unto earth, unto sin,
and unto man, that we might be born again unto heaven, unto righteousness
and unto God.
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- Brother Covert says that makes us as brethren.
It does certainly make us as brethren. And He is not ashamed
to call us His brethren, either.
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- Then He was born again, by the Holy Ghost,
for it is written and was spoken to Mary, "The Holy Ghost
shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow
thee, therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God."
- Jesus, born of the Holy Ghost, born again,
grew "in wisdom and stature," unto the fullness of
life and character in the world, to where He could say to God,
"I have glorified thee on the earth: I have finished the
work thou gavest me to do." God's plan and mind in Him had
attained to perfection.
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- Jesus, born again, born of the Holy Ghost,
born of flesh and blood, as we were, the Captain of our salvation,
was made "perfect through sufferings." For "though
he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he
suffered;; and being made perfect, he became the author of eternal
salvation unto all them that obey him." Heb. 2:10; 5:8,9.
Jesus thus went to perfection in human flesh, through suffering;
because it is in a world of suffering that we in human flesh
must attain perfection.
- And while growing all the time, He was
perfect all the time. Do you see that? There is where many people
misconceive the whole thought of Christian perfection--they think
the ultimate is the only measure. It is in God's plan, but the
ultimate is not reached at the beginning. Look again at the fourth
of Ephesians. This is a suggestion, thrown out to you and me,
how we may attain to this perfection, "the measure of the
stature of the fullness of Christ." I read the thirteenth
verse; now couple with that verses 14-16: "Till we all come
in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of
God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the
fullness of Christ: that we henceforth be no more children, tossed
to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by
the sleight of men and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in
wait to deceive; but speaking the truth in love, may grow up
into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ."
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- This is to be accomplished in you and
me by growth; but there can be no growth where there is no life.
This is growth in the knowledge of God, growth in the wisdom
of God, growth in the character of God, growth in God; therefore
it can be only by the life of God. But that life is planted in
the man at the new birth. He is born again, born of the Holy
Ghost; and the life of God is planted there, that he "may
grow up in to him"--in how much? "In all things."
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- You remember that "the kingdom of
heaven is likened unto a man which sowed good seed in his field."
And "the seed is the word of God." The seed is planted.
He realizes that night and day it grows, he knows not how. But
that seed is what? It is perfect, for God made it. It sprouts
presently. What of the sprout?
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- [Congregation: "Perfect, too."]
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- Is it?
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- [Voices: "Yes."]
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- But it is not a head of grain. It is not
a stalk standing full and strong. It is a mere sprout peeping
through the ground. But what of it? Is it not perfect?
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- [Congregation: "Yes."]
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- According to the rate of its progress
it is as perfect at that point as it will be when its course
is finished, at the point of maturity. Do you not see? Let not
that misconception abide anymore. Away with it!
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- When that sprout peeps through the ground,
you stoop to look at it. It is a thing to be admired. It is charming,
because it is perfect. That is as perfect a blade as ever appeared
on earth, but it is a mere spindling thing, barely peeping through
the ground. That is all there is of it, but it is perfect. It
is perfect, because it is as God made it. God is the only one
that had anything to do with it. Do you not see? It is all right.
So you and I, born again of that good seed of the word of God---born
by the word of God and the Holy Ghost, born of the perfect seed--when
that seed sprouts and grows and begins to appear among men, people
see the characteristics of Christ. And what is He? Perfect. Then
what is the Christian right there?
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- [Congregation: "Perfect."]
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- If we be born again through the power
of Jesus Christ, and God Himself directs the work, what will
that be which appears? It will be perfect. And that is Christian
perfection at that point. Jesus Christ presents you holy, unblameable,
and unreprovable, before the throne at that point.
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- That sprout grows and stands above the
ground, presently another blade shoots off. There are two of
them, and each is just as handsome as the other. The third one
appears. It is now a stalk, and still grows. It now presents
another picture altogether from that which it presented at first.
Another picture indeed, but no more perfect than before. It is
nearer to ultimate perfection, nearer to God's accomplished purpose,
but though nearer to ultimate perfection, it is no more perfect,
as it stands now, than it was the moment that it peeped through
the ground.
- In time it grows to its full height. The
head is full-formed. The bloom appears upon it. It is more beautiful
on account of it. And at last appears the full head of grain,
perfect; and the grains of wheat, each one perfect. The work,
God's work, is finished upon it. It is perfected. It has attained
unto perfection according to God's mind when He started it.
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- That is Christian perfection. It comes
by growth. But the growth can be only by the life of God. And
the life of God being the spring, it can grow only according
to God's order. Only He can shape the growth. Only He knows,
in perfection, the pattern. Christ is the pattern. God knows
perfectly the pattern, and He can cause us to grow in perfection
according to that pattern, because the same power, the same life,
is in this growth that was in the growth of the original pattern,
Jesus Christ.
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- And as Jesus began, at His birth, as a
little child in human flesh and grew up and finished the work
that God had given Him to do, so you and I, born again, growing
up in Him in all things, come presently to the day when we, as
did He, shall say and say in righteousness, "I have glorified
thee on the earth: I have finished the work thou gavest me to
do." For it is written, "In the days of the voice of
the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery
of God should be finished." We are in that day. We have
that mystery given to us to give to the world. It is to be finished
for the world, and it is to be finished in those who have it.
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- But what is the mystery of God? "Christ
in you, the hope of glory." "God . . . manifest in
the flesh." Then in these days that mystery is to be finished
in one hundred and forty-four thousand people. God's work in
human flesh, God being manifested in human flesh, in you and
me, is to be finished. His work upon you and me is to be finished.
We are to be perfected in Jesus Christ. By the Spirit we are
to come unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of
the fullness of Christ.
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- Is not that worth having? Is not the Lord's
way a good way unto perfection? Oh, then, "leaving the principles
of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not
laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works and
of faith toward God, of the doctrine of baptisms and of laying
on of hands and of resurrection of the dead and of eternal judgment."
He has freed us from the unstable foundation that we had when
in sin. Let the only foundation be that of the service of righteousness
unto holiness and the end, everlasting life.
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- And to every soul who will face the judgment
and hold himself in the presence of the Judgment, surrendering
himself to crucifixion and destruction, that thing will be accomplished
in God's own way and in the short time in which He has promised
to bring us unto righteousness. Then it is only God, God's estimate,
His standard, and Christ the pattern, and His the work, always,
in all things, everywhere and forever! Then be of good cheer.
Let it be Christ first, last, and all the time.
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- July 18, July 25, August 1, 1899
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